Jump to content
  • Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...

UK Asylum Seekers Are Still on Edge After the Far-Right Riots


Recommended Posts

  • Diamond Member

This is the hidden content, please

*** Asylum Seekers Are Still on Edge After the Far-Right Riots

The mob was growing, encircling the hotel near the northern English town of Rotherham where asylum seekers were living.

Abdulmoiz, an asylum seeker in his 20s from Sudan, said he watched from an upstairs window with other men trapped inside. All they could do was pray and wait, he said, as the men outside began attacking the building, throwing objects, breaking windows and chanting, “

This is the hidden content, please
.” Some of the attackers tried to set ***** to the building.

“People were in a panic,” said Abdulmoiz, who asked to be identified only by his first name to avoid jeopardizing his asylum claim, and who spoke just days after the ******* through an interpreter. “If the people outside didn’t ***** us,” he feared, “the smoke would.”

The police eventually managed to push back the Rotherham rioters, but the residents, including Abdulmoiz, were still terrified. He has since moved to another hotel, in Birmingham, but he said the ***** has barely abated.

The riots that shook Britain over more than a week have quieted, at least for now. The government has been working to charge and sentence rioters quickly, providing a clear warning to anyone who wanted to continue the ********* that left dozens of police officers injured. Mosques, charities, lawyers that help asylum seekers, public buildings and businesses have been on high alert since the riots.

As of Monday, nearly 1,000 people had been arrested and nearly 550 had been charged, according to the National Police Chiefs’ Council. But the riots left a bitter aftertaste not just for asylum seekers, but also for others who felt they were once again the targets of ****** in a country where immigration has become a flashpoint.

Refugees and community organizers said those groups included immigrants and asylum seekers, but also Muslims, people who speak with a foreign accent and people who are not white.

In Rotherham, in the days right after the hotel *******, wives were asking husbands to accompany them to the grocery store, according to some residents and community leaders. Some parents kept their children at home even on sunny days. And people said they were afraid to go to the mosque to pray, afraid to go to the town center to shop and even afraid to go to the park to play soccer.

“Everybody is scared,” Yaqoob Adam, a ******** from Sudan, said late last week. “All the foreigners, all the refugees. And they haven’t done anything.”

Mr. Adam, who was born in Darfur, arrived in Britain in 2016 and has become a leader in the ******** community in Rotherham. An avid runner and athlete, he was

This is the hidden content, please
as an outstanding member of British society. He organizes a soccer team and volunteers with several charities. (He also acted as an interpreter for Abdulmoiz.)

The riots have taken a toll on the community. Last week, Mr. Adam canceled a soccer game. Some of his regular players had lived in the hotel, a Holiday Inn Express, and they — along with other asylum seekers who had been staying there — had been moved to other locations after the *******. Other players were just too upset by the riots, he said.

He understands their lingering fears. And he shares them. How, he asked, crying, could people try to ***** someone alive?

“We never came here to hurt anybody,” he said. “We came for a good life.”

There had been tensions in Rotherham before, he said, but nothing like this in recent years. On Wednesday night, he went to protect a nearby mosque, worried that it might be attacked during anti-immigrant protests planned that evening. They never materialized. And now he feels that he may not know what his neighbors actually think of him.

“I fled war in my country — genocide in my country — to come to England,” he said. But at least as of last week, he was too afraid to stay out past 10 p.m. “This is not freedom.”

The ********* near Rotherham was aggravated by festering ******* tensions stemming from memories of widespread ******* ****** that took place in the area from 1997 to 2013, residents say. At least 1,400 children were abused, an independent report released in 2014 said, while the authorities were accused of turning a ****** eye to the problem. Most of the victims were white; the perpetrators were mostly of Pakistani heritage.

“The narrative was very much ‘us and them,’” said Abrar Javid, of the Rotherham ******* Community Forum. He said that the report’s findings, and the far-right reaction, “radicalized a lot of the white communities.” He added, “It poisoned a lot of minds in Rotherham.”

For the asylum seekers at the Holiday Inn Express, their sense of marginalization was heightened by their isolation; the hotel was far from the center of Rotherham and far from mosques and halal shops, said Zaid Hussain, an imam at Masjid Uthman, a local mosque.

Activists who support immigration say housing asylum seekers at hotels can make them more vulnerable to attacks because the buildings are easily identifiable and relatively defenseless. At least one other hotel that had been used for years to house asylum seekers

This is the hidden content, please
during the recent wave of *********, according to the BBC, and others
This is the hidden content, please
of protests in the past.

“People living in these hotels are almost like sitting ducks,” said Kama Petruczenko, a senior policy analyst at the ******** Council, a British nongovernmental organization.

Phil Turner, 72, who works with an organization called Stand Up to Racism Rotherham, said he led a counterdemonstration the day of the ******** on the Holiday Inn Express and was trying to hold back what he called a “pogrom-style” ******* on Muslims and migrants. The counterdemonstrators linked arms, chanting, “Refugees are welcome here,” but he said they were little match for the attackers.

“They were baying for blood,” he said. “It was a murderous mob.”

For Abdulmoiz, the ********* felt frighteningly familiar. He said he had fled Sudan’s spiraling civil war before he was forced to join the fighting, like his three older brothers.

His escape took him through Chad, Libya and Tunisia, he said, then across the sea to Italy. He had no life jacket and feared drowning. He said the racism in Italy was so strong, he left for France and eventually boarded an inflatable boat to England.

Now, a week into his new life in Birmingham, Abdulmoiz said he was happier than he had been in Rotherham. Speaking at a coffee shop near his new hotel — this time in English with the occasional help of a translator app on his phone — he said that he no longer had to board a bus to get to a mosque. There is one just a 10-minute walk away.

And he likes that the city is diverse: There are more Sudanese, and other Africans, on the streets.

But he is still not sleeping well. What plagues him is the memory of the ***** alarm that he said rang for hours as the riot raged at the hotel.

He can’t make it stop, he said: “It’s a sound I can’t forget.”

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad contributed research.



This is the hidden content, please

#Asylum #Seekers #Edge #FarRight #Riots

This is the hidden content, please

This is the hidden content, please

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Vote for the server

    To vote for this server you must login.

    Jim Carrey Flirting GIF

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Important Information

Privacy Notice: We utilize cookies to optimize your browsing experience and analyze website traffic. By consenting, you acknowledge and agree to our Cookie Policy, ensuring your privacy preferences are respected.